Common to almost all flavours of the Christian faith is the teaching of the ransom. That the sacrifice of Jesus' perfect human life paid back the debt of the perfect human life which our forefather Adam had forfeited.
But is it truly a 'corresponding sacrifice'?
Points to consider:
[1] If Adam had not sinned, he would've lived forever. Thus by sinning, and eventually dying, he would be dead - forever. Jesus on the other hand could not have lived forever. ( To have not given up his life would have been an act of disobedience - he would just have been another 'dead Adam'.) So the value of his sacrifice was not equal to that lost.
[2] Jesus existed before Adam and exists still. Where is the loss? If I sacrifice £30 to cover a speeding fine I am down by £30. If God sacrifices his son to pay a 'sin debt' he should be down by one son. I cannot offer the courts 'money' I printed myself to pay a debt and yet God can 'create' a perfect man specifically for the purpose of paying the ransom. Why?
[3] Adam's offspring were immediately born into imperfection because of the debt he incurred. Why, once Christ had paid back the debt in 33 C.E., were subsequent babies not immediately born into perfection?
It just doesn't seem to balance. Now please don't start bashing me about the head for having a go at cherished beliefs, I'm not looking for an argument. Honest, straightforward questions deserve answers in kind.
Nic'